Port of OpenAI's Whisper model in C/C++
Go to file
Aaron Teo 23b3598952
devops: add s390x & ppc64le CI (llama/15925)
* devops: move s390x and ppc64le ci build

we have access to ubuntu-24.04-s390x and ppc64le images now

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: disable ppc64le for now since they have compiler errors

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: stop warnings as errors

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: switch to non-macro flag

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: going the llama macro route

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: add big-endian gguf test models

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: disable ppc64le to test s390x, check test build

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: dup .gguf.inp files for big-endian tests

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: dup .gguf.out files for big-endian too

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: add python setup and endian byteswap

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: pooring thing does not have s390x python3

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: add missing rust compiler for s390x

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: try rust actions runner

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Revert "devops: try rust actions runner"

This reverts commit 3f8db04356033d6c1d7eccc75ca396bc5298250c.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: try a different path for rust

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: dump home directory and user info

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: install gguf-py only

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: missed relative path

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: remove big-endian files since local swapping is working

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: revert test-tokenizer-0 cmakelists

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fix unicode flags conversion from and to uint16_t

Bitfields are allocated in different order on s390x

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Simplify byteswap command

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Add byteswapping and git-lfs for test-tokenizers-ggml-vocabs

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fix endianness detection in vocab loader

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Disable test-thread-safety on s390x

In this test a model is downloaded,
then immediately loaded to check if more downloads are needed,
and then used for test.

There is no clean way to separate all those steps
 to add byteswapping between them, so just skip this test.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fix q8_0 test in test-quantize-fns

vec_signed uses unexpected rounding mode.
Explicitly use different rounding function.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: add big-endian stories260K

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: add s390x test-eval-callback

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: fix test does not exist

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: fix model not found llama-eval-callback

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fix q3_K dot product error in test-quantize-fns on s390x

Array q8bytes had only 4 elements allocated, but 8 elements accessed.
This lead to write out of bounds and later read of overwritten values out of bounds
and incorrect result.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: re-enable ppc64le for testing

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: activate test-thread-safety for s390x

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: disable ppc64le tests

for some reason it keeps failing test-thread-safety tests and I do not
    have a machine that is able to replicate the tests.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* devops: LLAMA_FATAL_WARNINGS=ON

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Correct repository URL for s390x for test-thread-safety model

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fix fs_get_cache_directory

Ensure it works even if both XDG_CACHE_HOME and HOME are unset.
This might happen in containers.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Re-enable CI for ppc64le

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Fortify ggml_rope_impl

Only memcpy data from sections argument if it's non-NULL.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>

* Add TODO in struct unicode_cpt_flags to reimplement it in endian-independent way

* Update URL for big-endian model

* Update .github/workflows/build.yml

Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com>

* Update remaining mentions of BE models to ggml-org/models repo

---------

Signed-off-by: Aaron Teo <aaron.teo1@ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksei Nikiforov <aleksei.nikiforov@linux.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksei Nikiforov <103434461+AlekseiNikiforovIBM@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sigbjørn Skjæret <sigbjorn.skjaeret@scala.com>
2025-09-29 15:18:11 +03:00
.devops ci : update main-cuda.Dockerfile (#3371) 2025-08-13 19:30:45 +02:00
.github/workflows ci : remove brew installation of cmake for macos-latest (#3408) 2025-09-05 15:20:32 +02:00
bindings Handle negative value in padding (#3389) 2025-08-25 01:34:23 +09:00
ci ci: fix SYCL build (#2943) 2025-03-25 11:20:37 +02:00
cmake Fixes for Windows (#2790) 2025-02-06 15:37:21 +08:00
examples talk-llama : sync llama.cpp 2025-09-20 13:58:28 +03:00
ggml devops: add s390x & ppc64le CI (llama/15925) 2025-09-29 15:18:11 +03:00
grammars whisper : add grammar-based sampling (#1229) 2023-11-13 10:51:34 +02:00
include whisper : add version function (#3289) 2025-06-26 18:09:42 +02:00
models whisper : prefer curl over wget in download scripts (#3409) 2025-09-08 06:32:19 +02:00
samples examples : add support for decoding input with ffmpeg (Linux) (#2133) 2024-05-21 18:31:41 +03:00
scripts sync : ggml 2025-09-20 13:46:41 +03:00
src whisper : fixed crash in GPU device selection on multi-GPU systems (#3372) 2025-08-12 13:58:52 +03:00
tests tests : use CMake definitions for model/sample paths (#3406) 2025-09-04 15:08:30 +02:00
.dockerignore build : Add Moore Threads GPU support and update GitHub workflow for MUSA build (#3069) 2025-04-28 11:06:41 +03:00
.gitignore whisper : add .gitignore entries for OpenVINO support (#3276) 2025-06-24 07:50:16 +02:00
AUTHORS authors : update 2025-02-04 13:03:40 +02:00
CMakeLists.txt whisper : add version function (#3289) 2025-06-26 18:09:42 +02:00
LICENSE license : update copyright notice + add AUTHORS 2024-04-09 20:27:44 +03:00
Makefile make : fix samples glob pattern (#3100) 2025-04-30 14:21:51 +03:00
README.md musa: upgrade musa sdk to rc4.2.0 (#3324) 2025-07-24 13:19:57 +03:00
README_sycl.md docs : convert README_sycl.md to utf8 format [no ci] (#3191) 2025-05-27 10:53:50 +02:00
build-xcframework.sh Support static xcframework packaging in build-xcframework.sh (#3322) 2025-07-26 12:25:44 +02:00
close-issue.yml ci : add stalebot 2025-02-04 09:30:20 +02:00

README.md

whisper.cpp

whisper.cpp

Actions Status License: MIT Conan Center npm

Stable: v1.7.6 / Roadmap

High-performance inference of OpenAI's Whisper automatic speech recognition (ASR) model:

Supported platforms:

The entire high-level implementation of the model is contained in whisper.h and whisper.cpp. The rest of the code is part of the ggml machine learning library.

Having such a lightweight implementation of the model allows to easily integrate it in different platforms and applications. As an example, here is a video of running the model on an iPhone 13 device - fully offline, on-device: whisper.objc

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/197385372-962a6dea-bca1-4d50-bf96-1d8c27b98c81.mp4

You can also easily make your own offline voice assistant application: command

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/204038393-2f846eae-c255-4099-a76d-5735c25c49da.mp4

On Apple Silicon, the inference runs fully on the GPU via Metal:

https://github.com/ggml-org/whisper.cpp/assets/1991296/c82e8f86-60dc-49f2-b048-d2fdbd6b5225

Quick start

First clone the repository:

git clone https://github.com/ggml-org/whisper.cpp.git

Navigate into the directory:

cd whisper.cpp

Then, download one of the Whisper models converted in ggml format. For example:

sh ./models/download-ggml-model.sh base.en

Now build the whisper-cli example and transcribe an audio file like this:

# build the project
cmake -B build
cmake --build build -j --config Release

# transcribe an audio file
./build/bin/whisper-cli -f samples/jfk.wav

For a quick demo, simply run make base.en.

The command downloads the base.en model converted to custom ggml format and runs the inference on all .wav samples in the folder samples.

For detailed usage instructions, run: ./build/bin/whisper-cli -h

Note that the whisper-cli example currently runs only with 16-bit WAV files, so make sure to convert your input before running the tool. For example, you can use ffmpeg like this:

ffmpeg -i input.mp3 -ar 16000 -ac 1 -c:a pcm_s16le output.wav

More audio samples

If you want some extra audio samples to play with, simply run:

make -j samples

This will download a few more audio files from Wikipedia and convert them to 16-bit WAV format via ffmpeg.

You can download and run the other models as follows:

make -j tiny.en
make -j tiny
make -j base.en
make -j base
make -j small.en
make -j small
make -j medium.en
make -j medium
make -j large-v1
make -j large-v2
make -j large-v3
make -j large-v3-turbo

Memory usage

Model Disk Mem
tiny 75 MiB ~273 MB
base 142 MiB ~388 MB
small 466 MiB ~852 MB
medium 1.5 GiB ~2.1 GB
large 2.9 GiB ~3.9 GB

POWER VSX Intrinsics

whisper.cpp supports POWER architectures and includes code which significantly speeds operation on Linux running on POWER9/10, making it capable of faster-than-realtime transcription on underclocked Raptor Talos II. Ensure you have a BLAS package installed, and replace the standard cmake setup with:

# build with GGML_BLAS defined
cmake -B build -DGGML_BLAS=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release
./build/bin/whisper-cli [ .. etc .. ]

Quantization

whisper.cpp supports integer quantization of the Whisper ggml models. Quantized models require less memory and disk space and depending on the hardware can be processed more efficiently.

Here are the steps for creating and using a quantized model:

# quantize a model with Q5_0 method
cmake -B build
cmake --build build -j --config Release
./build/bin/quantize models/ggml-base.en.bin models/ggml-base.en-q5_0.bin q5_0

# run the examples as usual, specifying the quantized model file
./build/bin/whisper-cli -m models/ggml-base.en-q5_0.bin ./samples/gb0.wav

Core ML support

On Apple Silicon devices, the Encoder inference can be executed on the Apple Neural Engine (ANE) via Core ML. This can result in significant speed-up - more than x3 faster compared with CPU-only execution. Here are the instructions for generating a Core ML model and using it with whisper.cpp:

  • Install Python dependencies needed for the creation of the Core ML model:

    pip install ane_transformers
    pip install openai-whisper
    pip install coremltools
    
    • To ensure coremltools operates correctly, please confirm that Xcode is installed and execute xcode-select --install to install the command-line tools.
    • Python 3.11 is recommended.
    • MacOS Sonoma (version 14) or newer is recommended, as older versions of MacOS might experience issues with transcription hallucination.
    • [OPTIONAL] It is recommended to utilize a Python version management system, such as Miniconda for this step:
      • To create an environment, use: conda create -n py311-whisper python=3.11 -y
      • To activate the environment, use: conda activate py311-whisper
  • Generate a Core ML model. For example, to generate a base.en model, use:

    ./models/generate-coreml-model.sh base.en
    

    This will generate the folder models/ggml-base.en-encoder.mlmodelc

  • Build whisper.cpp with Core ML support:

    # using CMake
    cmake -B build -DWHISPER_COREML=1
    cmake --build build -j --config Release
    
  • Run the examples as usual. For example:

    $ ./build/bin/whisper-cli -m models/ggml-base.en.bin -f samples/jfk.wav
    
    ...
    
    whisper_init_state: loading Core ML model from 'models/ggml-base.en-encoder.mlmodelc'
    whisper_init_state: first run on a device may take a while ...
    whisper_init_state: Core ML model loaded
    
    system_info: n_threads = 4 / 10 | AVX = 0 | AVX2 = 0 | AVX512 = 0 | FMA = 0 | NEON = 1 | ARM_FMA = 1 | F16C = 0 | FP16_VA = 1 | WASM_SIMD = 0 | BLAS = 1 | SSE3 = 0 | VSX = 0 | COREML = 1 |
    
    ...
    

    The first run on a device is slow, since the ANE service compiles the Core ML model to some device-specific format. Next runs are faster.

For more information about the Core ML implementation please refer to PR #566.

OpenVINO support

On platforms that support OpenVINO, the Encoder inference can be executed on OpenVINO-supported devices including x86 CPUs and Intel GPUs (integrated & discrete).

This can result in significant speedup in encoder performance. Here are the instructions for generating the OpenVINO model and using it with whisper.cpp:

  • First, setup python virtual env. and install python dependencies. Python 3.10 is recommended.

    Windows:

    cd models
    python -m venv openvino_conv_env
    openvino_conv_env\Scripts\activate
    python -m pip install --upgrade pip
    pip install -r requirements-openvino.txt
    

    Linux and macOS:

    cd models
    python3 -m venv openvino_conv_env
    source openvino_conv_env/bin/activate
    python -m pip install --upgrade pip
    pip install -r requirements-openvino.txt
    
  • Generate an OpenVINO encoder model. For example, to generate a base.en model, use:

    python convert-whisper-to-openvino.py --model base.en
    

    This will produce ggml-base.en-encoder-openvino.xml/.bin IR model files. It's recommended to relocate these to the same folder as ggml models, as that is the default location that the OpenVINO extension will search at runtime.

  • Build whisper.cpp with OpenVINO support:

    Download OpenVINO package from release page. The recommended version to use is 2024.6.0. Ready to use Binaries of the required libraries can be found in the OpenVino Archives

    After downloading & extracting package onto your development system, set up required environment by sourcing setupvars script. For example:

    Linux:

    source /path/to/l_openvino_toolkit_ubuntu22_2023.0.0.10926.b4452d56304_x86_64/setupvars.sh
    

    Windows (cmd):

    C:\Path\To\w_openvino_toolkit_windows_2023.0.0.10926.b4452d56304_x86_64\setupvars.bat
    

    And then build the project using cmake:

    cmake -B build -DWHISPER_OPENVINO=1
    cmake --build build -j --config Release
    
  • Run the examples as usual. For example:

    $ ./build/bin/whisper-cli -m models/ggml-base.en.bin -f samples/jfk.wav
    
    ...
    
    whisper_ctx_init_openvino_encoder: loading OpenVINO model from 'models/ggml-base.en-encoder-openvino.xml'
    whisper_ctx_init_openvino_encoder: first run on a device may take a while ...
    whisper_openvino_init: path_model = models/ggml-base.en-encoder-openvino.xml, device = GPU, cache_dir = models/ggml-base.en-encoder-openvino-cache
    whisper_ctx_init_openvino_encoder: OpenVINO model loaded
    
    system_info: n_threads = 4 / 8 | AVX = 1 | AVX2 = 1 | AVX512 = 0 | FMA = 1 | NEON = 0 | ARM_FMA = 0 | F16C = 1 | FP16_VA = 0 | WASM_SIMD = 0 | BLAS = 0 | SSE3 = 1 | VSX = 0 | COREML = 0 | OPENVINO = 1 |
    
    ...
    

    The first time run on an OpenVINO device is slow, since the OpenVINO framework will compile the IR (Intermediate Representation) model to a device-specific 'blob'. This device-specific blob will get cached for the next run.

For more information about the OpenVINO implementation please refer to PR #1037.

NVIDIA GPU support

With NVIDIA cards the processing of the models is done efficiently on the GPU via cuBLAS and custom CUDA kernels. First, make sure you have installed cuda: https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-downloads

Now build whisper.cpp with CUDA support:

cmake -B build -DGGML_CUDA=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release

or for newer NVIDIA GPU's (RTX 5000 series):

cmake -B build -DGGML_CUDA=1 -DCMAKE_CUDA_ARCHITECTURES="86"
cmake --build build -j --config Release

Vulkan GPU support

Cross-vendor solution which allows you to accelerate workload on your GPU. First, make sure your graphics card driver provides support for Vulkan API.

Now build whisper.cpp with Vulkan support:

cmake -B build -DGGML_VULKAN=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release

BLAS CPU support via OpenBLAS

Encoder processing can be accelerated on the CPU via OpenBLAS. First, make sure you have installed openblas: https://www.openblas.net/

Now build whisper.cpp with OpenBLAS support:

cmake -B build -DGGML_BLAS=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release

Ascend NPU support

Ascend NPU provides inference acceleration via CANN and AI cores.

First, check if your Ascend NPU device is supported:

Verified devices

Ascend NPU Status
Atlas 300T A2 Support

Then, make sure you have installed CANN toolkit . The lasted version of CANN is recommanded.

Now build whisper.cpp with CANN support:

cmake -B build -DGGML_CANN=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release

Run the inference examples as usual, for example:

./build/bin/whisper-cli -f samples/jfk.wav -m models/ggml-base.en.bin -t 8

Notes:

  • If you have trouble with Ascend NPU device, please create a issue with [CANN] prefix/tag.
  • If you run successfully with your Ascend NPU device, please help update the table Verified devices.

Moore Threads GPU support

With Moore Threads cards the processing of the models is done efficiently on the GPU via muBLAS and custom MUSA kernels. First, make sure you have installed MUSA SDK rc4.2.0: https://developer.mthreads.com/sdk/download/musa?equipment=&os=&driverVersion=&version=4.2.0

Now build whisper.cpp with MUSA support:

cmake -B build -DGGML_MUSA=1
cmake --build build -j --config Release

or specify the architecture for your Moore Threads GPU. For example, if you have a MTT S80 GPU, you can specify the architecture as follows:

cmake -B build -DGGML_MUSA=1 -DMUSA_ARCHITECTURES="21"
cmake --build build -j --config Release

FFmpeg support (Linux only)

If you want to support more audio formats (such as Opus and AAC), you can turn on the WHISPER_FFMPEG build flag to enable FFmpeg integration.

First, you need to install required libraries:

# Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt install libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev

# RHEL/Fedora
sudo dnf install libavcodec-free-devel libavformat-free-devel libavutil-free-devel

Then you can build the project as follows:

cmake -B build -D WHISPER_FFMPEG=yes
cmake --build build

Run the following example to confirm it's working:

# Convert an audio file to Opus format
ffmpeg -i samples/jfk.wav jfk.opus

# Transcribe the audio file
./build/bin/whisper-cli --model models/ggml-base.en.bin --file jfk.opus

Docker

Prerequisites

  • Docker must be installed and running on your system.
  • Create a folder to store big models & intermediate files (ex. /whisper/models)

Images

We have two Docker images available for this project:

  1. ghcr.io/ggml-org/whisper.cpp:main: This image includes the main executable file as well as curl and ffmpeg. (platforms: linux/amd64, linux/arm64)
  2. ghcr.io/ggml-org/whisper.cpp:main-cuda: Same as main but compiled with CUDA support. (platforms: linux/amd64)
  3. ghcr.io/ggml-org/whisper.cpp:main-musa: Same as main but compiled with MUSA support. (platforms: linux/amd64)

Usage

# download model and persist it in a local folder
docker run -it --rm \
  -v path/to/models:/models \
  whisper.cpp:main "./models/download-ggml-model.sh base /models"
# transcribe an audio file
docker run -it --rm \
  -v path/to/models:/models \
  -v path/to/audios:/audios \
  whisper.cpp:main "whisper-cli -m /models/ggml-base.bin -f /audios/jfk.wav"
# transcribe an audio file in samples folder
docker run -it --rm \
  -v path/to/models:/models \
  whisper.cpp:main "whisper-cli -m /models/ggml-base.bin -f ./samples/jfk.wav"

Installing with Conan

You can install pre-built binaries for whisper.cpp or build it from source using Conan. Use the following command:

conan install --requires="whisper-cpp/[*]" --build=missing

For detailed instructions on how to use Conan, please refer to the Conan documentation.

Limitations

  • Inference only

Real-time audio input example

This is a naive example of performing real-time inference on audio from your microphone. The stream tool samples the audio every half a second and runs the transcription continuously. More info is available in issue #10. You will need to have sdl2 installed for it to work properly.

cmake -B build -DWHISPER_SDL2=ON
cmake --build build -j --config Release
./build/bin/whisper-stream -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -t 8 --step 500 --length 5000

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/194935793-76afede7-cfa8-48d8-a80f-28ba83be7d09.mp4

Confidence color-coding

Adding the --print-colors argument will print the transcribed text using an experimental color coding strategy to highlight words with high or low confidence:

./build/bin/whisper-cli -m models/ggml-base.en.bin -f samples/gb0.wav --print-colors
image

Controlling the length of the generated text segments (experimental)

For example, to limit the line length to a maximum of 16 characters, simply add -ml 16:

$ ./build/bin/whisper-cli -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -f ./samples/jfk.wav -ml 16

whisper_model_load: loading model from './models/ggml-base.en.bin'
...
system_info: n_threads = 4 / 10 | AVX2 = 0 | AVX512 = 0 | NEON = 1 | FP16_VA = 1 | WASM_SIMD = 0 | BLAS = 1 |

main: processing './samples/jfk.wav' (176000 samples, 11.0 sec), 4 threads, 1 processors, lang = en, task = transcribe, timestamps = 1 ...

[00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:00.850]   And so my
[00:00:00.850 --> 00:00:01.590]   fellow
[00:00:01.590 --> 00:00:04.140]   Americans, ask
[00:00:04.140 --> 00:00:05.660]   not what your
[00:00:05.660 --> 00:00:06.840]   country can do
[00:00:06.840 --> 00:00:08.430]   for you, ask
[00:00:08.430 --> 00:00:09.440]   what you can do
[00:00:09.440 --> 00:00:10.020]   for your
[00:00:10.020 --> 00:00:11.000]   country.

Word-level timestamp (experimental)

The --max-len argument can be used to obtain word-level timestamps. Simply use -ml 1:

$ ./build/bin/whisper-cli -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -f ./samples/jfk.wav -ml 1

whisper_model_load: loading model from './models/ggml-base.en.bin'
...
system_info: n_threads = 4 / 10 | AVX2 = 0 | AVX512 = 0 | NEON = 1 | FP16_VA = 1 | WASM_SIMD = 0 | BLAS = 1 |

main: processing './samples/jfk.wav' (176000 samples, 11.0 sec), 4 threads, 1 processors, lang = en, task = transcribe, timestamps = 1 ...

[00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:00.320]
[00:00:00.320 --> 00:00:00.370]   And
[00:00:00.370 --> 00:00:00.690]   so
[00:00:00.690 --> 00:00:00.850]   my
[00:00:00.850 --> 00:00:01.590]   fellow
[00:00:01.590 --> 00:00:02.850]   Americans
[00:00:02.850 --> 00:00:03.300]  ,
[00:00:03.300 --> 00:00:04.140]   ask
[00:00:04.140 --> 00:00:04.990]   not
[00:00:04.990 --> 00:00:05.410]   what
[00:00:05.410 --> 00:00:05.660]   your
[00:00:05.660 --> 00:00:06.260]   country
[00:00:06.260 --> 00:00:06.600]   can
[00:00:06.600 --> 00:00:06.840]   do
[00:00:06.840 --> 00:00:07.010]   for
[00:00:07.010 --> 00:00:08.170]   you
[00:00:08.170 --> 00:00:08.190]  ,
[00:00:08.190 --> 00:00:08.430]   ask
[00:00:08.430 --> 00:00:08.910]   what
[00:00:08.910 --> 00:00:09.040]   you
[00:00:09.040 --> 00:00:09.320]   can
[00:00:09.320 --> 00:00:09.440]   do
[00:00:09.440 --> 00:00:09.760]   for
[00:00:09.760 --> 00:00:10.020]   your
[00:00:10.020 --> 00:00:10.510]   country
[00:00:10.510 --> 00:00:11.000]  .

Speaker segmentation via tinydiarize (experimental)

More information about this approach is available here: https://github.com/ggml-org/whisper.cpp/pull/1058

Sample usage:

# download a tinydiarize compatible model
./models/download-ggml-model.sh small.en-tdrz

# run as usual, adding the "-tdrz" command-line argument
./build/bin/whisper-cli -f ./samples/a13.wav -m ./models/ggml-small.en-tdrz.bin -tdrz
...
main: processing './samples/a13.wav' (480000 samples, 30.0 sec), 4 threads, 1 processors, lang = en, task = transcribe, tdrz = 1, timestamps = 1 ...
...
[00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:03.800]   Okay Houston, we've had a problem here. [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:03.800 --> 00:00:06.200]   This is Houston. Say again please. [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:06.200 --> 00:00:08.260]   Uh Houston we've had a problem.
[00:00:08.260 --> 00:00:11.320]   We've had a main beam up on a volt. [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:11.320 --> 00:00:13.820]   Roger main beam interval. [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:13.820 --> 00:00:15.100]   Uh uh [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:15.100 --> 00:00:18.020]   So okay stand, by thirteen we're looking at it. [SPEAKER_TURN]
[00:00:18.020 --> 00:00:25.740]   Okay uh right now uh Houston the uh voltage is uh is looking good um.
[00:00:27.620 --> 00:00:29.940]   And we had a a pretty large bank or so.

Karaoke-style movie generation (experimental)

The whisper-cli example provides support for output of karaoke-style movies, where the currently pronounced word is highlighted. Use the -owts argument and run the generated bash script. This requires to have ffmpeg installed.

Here are a few "typical" examples:

./build/bin/whisper-cli -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -f ./samples/jfk.wav -owts
source ./samples/jfk.wav.wts
ffplay ./samples/jfk.wav.mp4

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/199337465-dbee4b5e-9aeb-48a3-b1c6-323ac4db5b2c.mp4


./build/bin/whisper-cli -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -f ./samples/mm0.wav -owts
source ./samples/mm0.wav.wts
ffplay ./samples/mm0.wav.mp4

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/199337504-cc8fd233-0cb7-4920-95f9-4227de3570aa.mp4


./build/bin/whisper-cli -m ./models/ggml-base.en.bin -f ./samples/gb0.wav -owts
source ./samples/gb0.wav.wts
ffplay ./samples/gb0.wav.mp4

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/199337538-b7b0c7a3-2753-4a88-a0cd-f28a317987ba.mp4


Video comparison of different models

Use the scripts/bench-wts.sh script to generate a video in the following format:

./scripts/bench-wts.sh samples/jfk.wav
ffplay ./samples/jfk.wav.all.mp4

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1991296/223206245-2d36d903-cf8e-4f09-8c3b-eb9f9c39d6fc.mp4


Benchmarks

In order to have an objective comparison of the performance of the inference across different system configurations, use the whisper-bench tool. The tool simply runs the Encoder part of the model and prints how much time it took to execute it. The results are summarized in the following Github issue:

Benchmark results

Additionally a script to run whisper.cpp with different models and audio files is provided bench.py.

You can run it with the following command, by default it will run against any standard model in the models folder.

python3 scripts/bench.py -f samples/jfk.wav -t 2,4,8 -p 1,2

It is written in python with the intention of being easy to modify and extend for your benchmarking use case.

It outputs a csv file with the results of the benchmarking.

ggml format

The original models are converted to a custom binary format. This allows to pack everything needed into a single file:

  • model parameters
  • mel filters
  • vocabulary
  • weights

You can download the converted models using the models/download-ggml-model.sh script or manually from here:

For more details, see the conversion script models/convert-pt-to-ggml.py or models/README.md.

Bindings

XCFramework

The XCFramework is a precompiled version of the library for iOS, visionOS, tvOS, and macOS. It can be used in Swift projects without the need to compile the library from source. For example, the v1.7.5 version of the XCFramework can be used as follows:

// swift-tools-version: 5.10
// The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package.

import PackageDescription

let package = Package(
    name: "Whisper",
    targets: [
        .executableTarget(
            name: "Whisper",
            dependencies: [
                "WhisperFramework"
            ]),
        .binaryTarget(
            name: "WhisperFramework",
            url: "https://github.com/ggml-org/whisper.cpp/releases/download/v1.7.5/whisper-v1.7.5-xcframework.zip",
            checksum: "c7faeb328620d6012e130f3d705c51a6ea6c995605f2df50f6e1ad68c59c6c4a"
        )
    ]
)

Voice Activity Detection (VAD)

Support for Voice Activity Detection (VAD) can be enabled using the --vad argument to whisper-cli. In addition to this option a VAD model is also required.

The way this works is that first the audio samples are passed through the VAD model which will detect speech segments. Using this information the only the speech segments that are detected are extracted from the original audio input and passed to whisper for processing. This reduces the amount of audio data that needs to be processed by whisper and can significantly speed up the transcription process.

The following VAD models are currently supported:

Silero-VAD

Silero-vad is a lightweight VAD model written in Python that is fast and accurate.

Models can be downloaded by running the following command on Linux or MacOS:

$ ./models/download-vad-model.sh silero-v5.1.2
Downloading ggml model silero-v5.1.2 from 'https://huggingface.co/ggml-org/whisper-vad' ...
ggml-silero-v5.1.2.bin        100%[==============================================>] 864.35K  --.-KB/s    in 0.04s
Done! Model 'silero-v5.1.2' saved in '/path/models/ggml-silero-v5.1.2.bin'
You can now use it like this:

  $ ./build/bin/whisper-cli -vm /path/models/ggml-silero-v5.1.2.bin --vad -f samples/jfk.wav -m models/ggml-base.en.bin

And the following command on Windows:

> .\models\download-vad-model.cmd silero-v5.1.2
Downloading vad model silero-v5.1.2...
Done! Model silero-v5.1.2 saved in C:\Users\danie\work\ai\whisper.cpp\ggml-silero-v5.1.2.bin
You can now use it like this:

C:\path\build\bin\Release\whisper-cli.exe -vm C:\path\ggml-silero-v5.1.2.bin --vad -m models/ggml-base.en.bin -f samples\jfk.wav

To see a list of all available models, run the above commands without any arguments.

This model can be also be converted manually to ggml using the following command:

$ python3 -m venv venv && source venv/bin/activate
$ (venv) pip install silero-vad
$ (venv) $ python models/convert-silero-vad-to-ggml.py --output models/silero.bin
Saving GGML Silero-VAD model to models/silero-v5.1.2-ggml.bin

And it can then be used with whisper as follows:

$ ./build/bin/whisper-cli \
   --file ./samples/jfk.wav \
   --model ./models/ggml-base.en.bin \
   --vad \
   --vad-model ./models/silero-v5.1.2-ggml.bin

VAD Options

  • --vad-threshold: Threshold probability for speech detection. A probability for a speech segment/frame above this threshold will be considered as speech.

  • --vad-min-speech-duration-ms: Minimum speech duration in milliseconds. Speech segments shorter than this value will be discarded to filter out brief noise or false positives.

  • --vad-min-silence-duration-ms: Minimum silence duration in milliseconds. Silence periods must be at least this long to end a speech segment. Shorter silence periods will be ignored and included as part of the speech.

  • --vad-max-speech-duration-s: Maximum speech duration in seconds. Speech segments longer than this will be automatically split into multiple segments at silence points exceeding 98ms to prevent excessively long segments.

  • --vad-speech-pad-ms: Speech padding in milliseconds. Adds this amount of padding before and after each detected speech segment to avoid cutting off speech edges.

  • --vad-samples-overlap: Amount of audio to extend from each speech segment into the next one, in seconds (e.g., 0.10 = 100ms overlap). This ensures speech isn't cut off abruptly between segments when they're concatenated together.

Examples

There are various examples of using the library for different projects in the examples folder. Some of the examples are even ported to run in the browser using WebAssembly. Check them out!

Example Web Description
whisper-cli whisper.wasm Tool for translating and transcribing audio using Whisper
whisper-bench bench.wasm Benchmark the performance of Whisper on your machine
whisper-stream stream.wasm Real-time transcription of raw microphone capture
whisper-command command.wasm Basic voice assistant example for receiving voice commands from the mic
whisper-server HTTP transcription server with OAI-like API
whisper-talk-llama Talk with a LLaMA bot
whisper.objc iOS mobile application using whisper.cpp
whisper.swiftui SwiftUI iOS / macOS application using whisper.cpp
whisper.android Android mobile application using whisper.cpp
whisper.nvim Speech-to-text plugin for Neovim
generate-karaoke.sh Helper script to easily generate a karaoke video of raw audio capture
livestream.sh Livestream audio transcription
yt-wsp.sh Download + transcribe and/or translate any VOD (original)
wchess wchess.wasm Voice-controlled chess

Discussions

If you have any kind of feedback about this project feel free to use the Discussions section and open a new topic. You can use the Show and tell category to share your own projects that use whisper.cpp. If you have a question, make sure to check the Frequently asked questions (#126) discussion.